Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
386
result(s) for
"Angiogenin"
Sort by:
Transfer RNA-derived fragments and tRNA halves: biogenesis, biological functions and their roles in diseases
2018
The number of studies on non-coding RNAs has increased substantially in recent years owing to their importance in gene regulation. However, the biological functions of small RNAs from abundant species of housekeeping non-coding RNAs (rRNA, tRNA, etc.) remain a highly studied topic. tRNA-derived small RNAs (tsRNAs) refer to the specific cleavage of tRNAs by specific nucleases [e.g., Dicer and angiogenin (ANG)] in particular cells or tissues or under certain conditions such as stress and hypoxia. tsRNAs are a type of non-coding small RNA that are widely found in the prokaryotic and eukaryotic transcriptomes and are generated from mature tRNAs or precursor tRNAs at different sites. There are two main types of tsRNAs, tRNA-derived fragments (tRFs) and tRNA halves. tRFs are 14–30 nucleotides (nt) long and mainly consist of three subclasses: tRF-5, tRF-3, and tRF-1. tRNA halves, which are 31–40 nt long, are generated by specific cleavage in the anticodon loops of mature tRNAs. There are two types of tRNA halves, 5′-tRNA halves and 3′-tRNA halves. tsRNAs have multiple biological functions including acting as signaling molecules in stress responses and as regulators of gene expression. Additionally, they have been considered to be involved in RNA processing, cell proliferation, translation suppression, the modulation of DNA damage response, and neurodegeneration. More importantly, they are closely related to the occurrence of many human diseases such as tumors, infectious diseases, metabolic diseases, and neurological diseases. Moreover, tsRNAs have the potential to become new biomarkers for disease diagnosis. Continuous investigations will help us to understand their generation and regulatory mechanisms as well as the possible roles of tRFs and tRNA halves.
Journal Article
Angiogenin maintains gut microbe homeostasis by balancing α-Proteobacteria and Lachnospiraceae
by
Liu, Yaxin
,
Yao, Zhengrong
,
Tang, Shasha
in
Alphaproteobacteria - drug effects
,
Angiogenin
,
Animals
2021
ObjectiveAntimicrobial peptides (AMPs) play essential roles in maintaining gut health and are associated with IBD. This study is to elucidate the effect of angiogenin (ANG), an intestine-secreted AMP, on gut microbiota and its relevance with IBD.DesignThe effect of ANG on microbiota and its contribution to colitis were evaluated in different colitis models with co-housing and faecal microbiota transplantation. ANG-regulated bacteria were determined by 16S rDNA sequencing and their functions in colitis were analysed by bacterial colonisation. The species-specific antimicrobial activity of ANG and its underlying mechanism were further investigated with microbiological and biochemical methods. ANG level and the key bacteria were characterised in IBD faecal samples.ResultsANG regulated microbiota composition and inhibited intestinal inflammation. Specifically, Ang1 deficiency in mice led to a decrease in the protective gut commensal strains of Lachnospiraceae but an increase in the colitogenic strains of α-Proteobacteria. Direct binding of ANG to α-Proteobacteria resulted in lethal disruption of bacterial membrane integrity, and consequently promoted the growth of Lachnospiraceae, which otherwise was antagonised by α-Proteobacteria. Oral administration of ANG1 reversed the dysbiosis and attenuated the severity of colitis in Ang1-deficient mice. The correlation among ANG, the identified bacteria and IBD status was established in patients.ConclusionThese findings demonstrate a novel role of ANG in shaping gut microbe composition and thus maintaining gut health, suggesting that the ANG-microbiota axis could be developed as a potential preventive and/or therapeutic approach for dysbiosis-related gut diseases.
Journal Article
G-quadruplex structures contribute to the neuroprotective effects of angiogenin-induced tRNA fragments
by
Ivanov, Pavel
,
Emara, Mohamed M.
,
Wagner, Gerhard
in
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
,
Anticodon
,
Binding sites
2014
Angiogenin (ANG) is a stress-activated ribonuclease that promotes the survival of motor neurons. Ribonuclease inactivating point mutations are found in a subset of patients with ALS, a fatal neurodegenerative disease with no cure. We recently showed that ANG cleaves tRNA within anticodon loops to produce 5′- and 3′-fragments known as tRNA-derived, stress-induced RNAs (tiRNAs). Selected 5′-tiRNAs (e.g., tiRNA ᴬˡᵃ, tiRNA Cʸˢ) cooperate with the translational repressor Y-box binding protein 1 (YB-1) to displace the cap-binding complex eIF4F from capped mRNA, inhibit translation initiation, and induce the assembly of stress granules (SGs). Here, we show that translationally active tiRNAs assemble unique G-quadruplex (G4) structures that are required for translation inhibition. We show that tiRNA ᴬˡᵃ binds the cold shock domain of YB-1 to activate these translational reprogramming events. We discovered that 5′-tiDNA ᴬˡᵃ (the DNA equivalent of 5′-tiRNA ᴬˡᵃ) is a stable tiRNA analog that displaces eIF4F from capped mRNA, inhibits translation initiation, and induces the assembly of SGs. The 5′-tiDNA ᴬˡᵃ also assembles a G4 structure that allows it to enter motor neurons spontaneously and trigger a neuroprotective response in a YB-1–dependent manner. Remarkably, the ability of 5′-tiRNA ᴬˡᵃ to induce SG assembly is inhibited by G4 structures formed by pathological GGGGCC repeats found in C9ORF72, the most common genetic cause of ALS, suggesting that functional interactions between G4 RNAs may contribute to neurodegenerative disease.
Significance Angiogenin is a stress-activated ribonuclease that cleaves tRNA to produce bioactive small noncoding RNAs [tRNA-derived, stress-induced RNAs (tiRNAs)] that function in a cytoprotective stress response program. Point mutations that reduce its ribonuclease activity are found in a subset of patients with ALS, a fatal neurodegenerative disease. We have found that selected tiRNAs assume G-quadruplex (G4) structures that are necessary for cytoprotective and prosurvival functions. Moreover, stable DNA analogs of these G4-containing tiRNAs spontaneously enter motor neurons and confer cytoprotection against stress. Our results identify tiRNAs as leading compounds for the development of a new class of neuroprotective drugs and give insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying the pathobiology of expanded G4-forming hexanucleotide repeats in the C9ORF72 gene.
Journal Article
Angiogenin mediates paternal inflammation-induced metabolic disorders in offspring through sperm tsRNAs
2021
Paternal environmental inputs can influence various phenotypes in offspring, presenting tremendous implications for basic biology and public health and policy. However, which signals function as a nexus to transmit paternal environmental inputs to offspring remains unclear. Here we show that offspring of fathers with inflammation exhibit metabolic disorders including glucose intolerance and obesity. Deletion of a mouse tRNA RNase, Angiogenin (
Ang
), abolished paternal inflammation-induced metabolic disorders in offspring. Additionally,
Ang
deletion prevented the inflammation-induced alteration of 5′-tRNA-derived small RNAs (5′-tsRNAs) expression profile in sperm, which might be essential in composing a sperm RNA ‘coding signature’ that is needed for paternal epigenetic memory. Microinjection of sperm 30–40 nt RNA fractions (predominantly 5′-tsRNAs) from inflammatory
Ang
+/+
males but not
Ang
–/–
males resulted in metabolic disorders in the resultant offspring. Moreover, zygotic injection with synthetic 5′-tsRNAs which increased in inflammatory mouse sperm and decreased by
Ang
deletion partially resembled paternal inflammation-induced metabolic disorders in offspring. Together, our findings demonstrate that Ang-mediated biogenesis of 5′-tsRNAs in sperm contributes to paternal inflammation-induced metabolic disorders in offspring.
Paternal environmental inputs can influence various phenotypes in offspring, with important implications for basic biology and public health. Here the authors show that Ang-mediated biogenesis of 5′-tsRNAs in sperm contributes to paternal inflammation-induced metabolic disorders in offspring.
Journal Article
New link between RNH1 and E2F1: regulates the development of lung adenocarcinoma
by
Zhao, Wenyue
,
Liu, Yang
,
Yang, Ying
in
Adenocarcinoma
,
Adenocarcinoma of Lung - genetics
,
Adenocarcinoma of Lung - metabolism
2024
Background
Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) is a non-small cell carcinoma. Ribonuclease/angiogenin inhibitor 1 (RNH1) exerts multiple roles in virous cancers. E2F1 is a critical transcription factor involved in the LUAD development. Here, we analyze the expression of RNH1 in LUAD patients, investigate the biological function of RNH1 in LUAD, and demonstrate its potential mechanisms through E2F1 in LUAD.
Methods
In the present study, we presented the expression of RNH1 in LUAD based on the database and confirmed it by western blot detection of RNH1 in human LUAD tissues. Lentiviral infection was constructed to silence or overexpress RNH1 in NCI-H1395 and NCI-H1437 cells. We assess the role of RNH1 on proliferation in LUAD cells by MTT assay, colony formation assays, and cell cycle detection. Hoechst staining and flow cytometry were used to evaluate the effects of RNH1 on apoptosis of LUAD cells. The function of RNH1 in invasion and migration was investigated by Transwell assay. Dual luciferase assay, ChIP detection, and pull-down assay were conducted to explore the association of E2F1 in the maintenance of RNH1 expression and function. The regulation of E2F1 on the functions of RNH1 in LUAD cells was explored. Mouse experiments were performed to confirm the in-vivo role of RNH1 in LUAD. mRNA sequencing indicated that RNH1 overexpression altered the expression profile of LUAD cells.
Results
RNH1 expression in LUAD tissues of patients was presented in this work. Importantly, RNH1 knockdown improved the proliferation, migration and invasion abilities of cells and RNH1 overexpression produced the opposite effects. Dual luciferase assay proved that E2F1 bound to the RNH1 promoter (-1064 ∼ -1054, -1514 ∼ -1504) to reduce the transcriptional activity of RNH1. ChIP assay indicated that E2F1 DNA was enriched at the RNH1 promoter (-1148 ∼ -943, -1628 ∼ -1423). Pull-down assays also showed the association between E2F1 and RNH1 promoter (-1148 ∼ -943). E2F1 overexpression contributed to the malignant behavior of LUAD cells, while RNH1 overexpression reversed it. High-throughput sequencing showed that RNH1 overexpression induced multiple genes expression changes, thereby modulating LUAD-related processes.
Conclusion
Our study demonstrates that binding of E2F1 to the RNH1 promoter may lead to inhibition of RNH1 expression and thus promoting the development of LUAD.
Journal Article
m5U54 tRNA hypomodification by lack of TRMT2A drives the generation of tRNA-derived small RNAs
2021
Transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules contain various post-transcriptional modifications that are crucial for tRNA stability, translation efficiency, and fidelity. Besides their canonical roles in translation, tRNAs also originate tRNA-derived small RNAs (tsRNAs), a class of small non-coding RNAs with regulatory functions ranging from translation regulation to gene expression control and cellular stress response. Recent evidence indicates that tsRNAs are also modified, however, the impact of tRNA epitranscriptome deregulation on tsRNAs generation is only now beginning to be uncovered. The 5-methyluridine (m5U) modification at position 54 of cytosolic tRNAs is one of the most common and conserved tRNA modifications among species. The tRNA methyltransferase TRMT2A catalyzes this modification, but its biological role remains mostly unexplored. Here, we show that TRMT2A knockdown in human cells induces m5U54 tRNA hypomodification and tsRNA formation. More specifically, m5U54 hypomodification is followed by overexpression of the ribonuclease angiogenin (ANG) that cleaves tRNAs near the anticodon, resulting in accumulation of 5′tRNA-derived stress-induced RNAs (5′tiRNAs), namely 5′tiRNA-GlyGCC and 5′tiRNA-GluCTC, among others. Additionally, transcriptomic analysis confirms that down-regulation of TRMT2A and consequently m5U54 hypomodification impacts the cellular stress response and RNA stability, which is often correlated with tiRNA generation. Accordingly, exposure to oxidative stress conditions induces TRMT2A down-regulation and tiRNA formation in mammalian cells. These results establish a link between tRNA hypomethylation and ANG-dependent tsRNAs formation and unravel m5U54 as a tRNA cleavage protective mark.
Journal Article
Osteoclasts protect bone blood vessels against senescence through the angiogenin/plexin-B2 axis
2021
Synthetic glucocorticoids (GCs), one of the most effective treatments for chronic inflammatory and autoimmune conditions in children, have adverse effects on the growing skeleton. GCs inhibit angiogenesis in growing bone, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we show that GC treatment in young mice induces vascular endothelial cell senescence in metaphysis of long bone, and that inhibition of endothelial cell senescence improves GC-impaired bone angiogenesis with coupled osteogenesis. We identify angiogenin (ANG), a ribonuclease with pro-angiogenic activity, secreted by osteoclasts as a key factor for protecting the neighboring vascular cells against senescence. ANG maintains the proliferative activity of endothelial cells through plexin-B2 (PLXNB2)-mediated transcription of ribosomal RNA (rRNA). GC treatment inhibits ANG production by suppressing osteoclast formation in metaphysis, resulting in impaired endothelial cell rRNA transcription and subsequent cellular senescence. These findings reveal the role of metaphyseal blood vessel senescence in mediating the action of GCs on growing skeleton and establish the ANG/PLXNB2 axis as a molecular basis for the osteoclast-vascular interplay in skeletal angiogenesis.
Glucocorticoids (GCs) inhibit bone angiogenesis and affect bone development, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, the authors show that GCs induce vascular cell senescence during bone development by inhibiting angiogenin secretion from osteoclasts, impairing angiogenesis via endothelial Plexin B2, resulting in unpaired bone growth.
Journal Article
Muscone Can Improve Spinal Cord Injury by Activating the Angiogenin/Plexin-B2 Axis
by
Botchway, Benson O. A.
,
Liu, Xuehong
,
Zhou, Yu
in
AKT protein
,
Angiogenin
,
Autonomic nervous system
2022
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating neurological disorder that usually damages sensorimotor and autonomic functions. Signaling pathways can play a key role in the repair process of SCI. The plexin-B2 acts as a receptor for angiogenin and mediates ribosomal RNA transcription, influencing cell survival and proliferation. Protein kinase B serine/threonine kinase interacts with angiogenin to form a positive feedback effect. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and vascular endothelial growth factor can induce angiogenin nuclear translocation. Moreover, the BDNF can promote the secretion of angiogenin. Interestingly, all of them can activate the angiogenin/plexin-B2 axis. Muscone has anti-inflammatory and proliferative features as it can inhibit nuclear transcription factor kappa-B (NF-κB) and activate the angiogenin/plexin-B2 axis, thus being significant agent in the SCI repair process. Herein, we review the potential mechanism of angiogenin/plexin-B2 axis activation and the role of muscone in SCI treatment. Muscone may attenuate inflammatory responses and promote neuronal regeneration after SCI.
Journal Article
tsRNAs: Novel small molecules from cell function and regulatory mechanism to therapeutic targets
2021
tsRNAs are small fragments of RNAs with specific lengths that are generated by particular ribonucleases, such as dicer and angiogenin (ANG), clipping on the rings of transfer RNAs (tRNAs) in specific cells and tissues under specific conditions. Depending on where the splicing site is, tsRNAs can be segmented into two main types, tRNA‐derived stress‐induced RNAs (tiRNAs) and tRNA‐derived fragments (tRFs). Many studies have shown that tsRNAs are functional molecules, not the random degradative products of tRNAs. Notably, due to their regulatory mechanism in regulating mRNA stability, transcription, ribosomal RNA (rRNA) synthesis and RNA reverse transcription, tsRNAs are significantly involved in the cell function, such as cell proliferation, migration, cycle and apoptosis, as well as the occurrence and development of a variety of diseases. In addition, tsRNAs may represent a new generation of clinical biomarkers or therapeutic targets because of their stable structures, high conservation and widely distribution, particularly in the peripheral tissues, bodily fluids and exosomes. In this review, we describe the generation, function and mechanism of tsRNAs and illustrate the current research progress of tsRNAs in various diseases, highlight their potentials as biomarkers and therapeutic targets in clinical application. Although our understanding of tsRNAs is still in infancy, the application prospects shown in this field deserve further exploration. tsRNAs are generated under stress condition which are functional molecules. Due to their regulatory mechanism in regulating mRNA stability, transcription, ribosomal RNA (rRNA) synthesis and RNA reverse transcription, tsRNAs are significantly involved in the cellular function, including cell proliferation, migration, cell cycle and apoptosis, as well as the occurrence and development of a variety of diseases.
Journal Article
Vasculogenic mimicry signaling revisited: focus on non-vascular VE-cadherin
by
Delgado-Bellido, Daniel
,
Serrano-Saenz, Santiago
,
Oliver, F. Javier
in
1-Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
,
Angiogenesis
,
Angiogenesis inhibitors
2017
Vasculogenic mimicry (VM) is a blood supply system independent of endothelial vessels in tumor cells from different origins. It reflects the plasticity of aggressive tumor cells that express vascular cell markers and line tumor vasculature. The presence of VM is associated with a high tumor grade, short survival, invasion and metastasis. Endothelial cells (ECs) express various members of the cadherin superfamily, in particular vascular endothelial (VE-) cadherin, which is the main adhesion receptor of endothelial adherent junctions. Aberrant extra-vascular expression of VE-cadherin has been observed in certain cancer types associated with VM. In this review we focus on non-endothelial VE-cadherin as a prominent factor involved in the acquisition of tubules-like structures by aggressive tumor cells and we summarize the specific signaling pathways, the association with trans-differentiation and stem-like phenotype and the therapeutic opportunities derived from the in-depth knowledge of the peculiarities of the biology of VE-cadherin and other key components of VM.
Journal Article